Epiphany comments on New study on choice blindness in moral positions - Less Wrong

73 Post author: nerfhammer 20 September 2012 06:14PM

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Comment author: Epiphany 21 September 2012 08:00:00PM *  0 points [-]

I'm having trouble interpreting what your point is. It seems like you're saying "because they were encouraged to look for swapped questions before hand, Epiphany's point might not be valid" however, what I read stated: "After the experiment, the participants were fully debriefed about the true purpose of the experiment." so it may not have even occurred to most of them to wonder whether the questions had been swapped at the point when they were giving confabulated answers.

Does this clarify anything? It seems somebody got confused. Not sure who.

Comment author: TheOtherDave 21 September 2012 08:44:09PM 3 points [-]

IIRC, questions that were scored as "uncorrected" were those that, even after debriefing, subjects did not identify as swapped.
So if Q1 is scored as uncorrected, part of what happened is that I gave answer A to Q1, it's swapped for B, I explained why I believe B, I was afterwards informed that some answers were swapped and asked whether there were any questions I thought that was true for, even if I didn't volunteer that judgment at the time, and I don't report that this was true of Q1.
If I'm only pretending to have an opinion (B) that's not mine about Q1, the question arises of why I don't at that time say "Oh, yeah, I thought that was the case about Q1, since I actually believe A, but I didn't say anything at the time."

As I say, though, it's certainly possible... I might continue the pretense of believing B.